Mike Mussina

23 September 2008


That being said, what about Mike Mussina?

The Moose has a lifetime ERA of 3.69, 2804 strikeouts and 268 wins (and counting) in his many seasons. But all things considered, does that make him worthy of a bust next to Goose Gossage?

Continue reading "What makes someone a hall of famer?"

Posted by Karol Kudyba | No comments yet

27 July 2008

erek Lowe ($10M)Ben Sheets ($10.1M)Johan Santana ($16.9M)Pedro Martinez ($11.8M)Andy Pettitte ($16M)Mike Mussina ($11M)Carl Pavano ($11M)Matt Morris ($10M)Greg Maddux ($10M) Barry Zito ($14.5M)Chris Carpenter ($10.5M)Vincente Padilla ($11M)Kevin Millwood ($10.3M) AJ Burnett ($13.2M)Roy Halladay ($10M)

Continue reading "Washburn's Farewell"

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3 July 2008

e pits Darrell Rasner, 4-6, 4.42 against Josh Beckett, 7-5, 3.65; late Saturday afternoon will find Mike Mussina, 10-6, 3.87 pitching against Justin Masterson, 4-2, 3.75. The series wraps up as ESPN's Sunday night game with Joba Chamberlain, 2-2, 2.22 facing the knuckleballer Tim Wakefield, 5-6, 3.72.

Continue reading "A slump headed into Yankee Stadium...."

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19 June 2008

That leaves them with a rotation of Andy Pettitte, Mike Mussina, Darrell Rasner, and a still-developing Joba Chamberlain, with Dan Giese expected to step into the fifth starter role.  That’s a shallow rotation, weighted at the older and younger ends like a barbell. Hurry up, C.C. Sabathia.

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16 June 2008

OK, that title was irresistible, but in fact I'm going to say that Chien-Ming Wang's foot injury should force the Yanks hand in a trade, especially when combined with other injuries this season. Funny how little things can combine to lead to something even larger, accumulating momentum gradually until it becomes irresistible, as it has with the murmurs about a trade for C.C. Sabathia, which is really more the point of this blog.

Continue reading "Off On the Wang Foot"

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3 May 2008

Mussina is on the hill today for the Yanks and, while I admire him and think he's a very good pitcher and a modest, intelligent, generally good fellow, I wonder about his Hall of Fame credentials. Dave Niehaus, the mellow-toned broadcaster, has repeatedly called him a shoo-in or a lock for the Hall during the game today, and it's made me wonder. To me, a player in the HOF represents someone who was genuinely and consistently feared (on the field, not off) during his career, the kind of pitcher that batters hated to face (and vice versa). And not for one year, but for several; you can be Sandy Koufax and be unhittable for four or five seasons (and merely outstanding for a handful more) or Nolan Ryan and be unhittable for twenty years.

Continue reading "Mike Mussina for the HOF?"

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31 March 2008

when they are pitching well, just so that they can be stretched over the course of the season.

If Mike Mussina cannot return to some semblance of his former self, the Yankees will be desperately in need of other pitchers who can provide quality innings. Kei Igawa, who notoriously bombed last season, could be counted on for multiple inning appearances out of the bullpen, as well as frequent spot starts. While Chamberlain is a force at the back end of the bullpen, they will still need other late inning relievers, especially if the starters aren’t making it through seven innings. At least for this season, the Yankees will be sorry they didn’t get Santana and expect them to be major players for pitching at the trade deadline this season.

Continue reading "MLB 2008 Season Preview: American Leauge East"

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7 March 2008

We try to roll back over, pulling the pillow in tight around our ears, but Epstein calls Mike Mussina a ‘bad apple’ because, as Epstein put it, Mussina and Kevin Brown spent the whole time bitching about the Yankees trek to Japan last year. And then goes on to say that the Yankees used the trip as a ‘crutch.’ So Steinbrenner Junior (Hank) fires back some long-winded and seemingly unrelated trash talk about the entire US of A being “Yankee Country,” just guaranteed to stir things up, which, of course, it did.

Continue reading "Pap, the Funky Chicken and oh my ..."

Posted by Skip Maloney | No comments yet

21 February 2008

g Joba in the rotation gives you a much better rotation and you don’t have to rely so much on Mike Mussina (who knows what he has left) and Ian Kennedy (who scouts only project to be a number three starter down the road).  Using Joba as a starter gives you a nasty 1-2-3 punch of Wang-Pettitte-Chamberlain.  It also puts him back to the position he is most used too, starting games.  In the rotation you would get around 150 innings from Joba instead of just 60 or 70 if you use him out of the bullpen.  Isn’t it better to have your best pitchers throw as many innings as possible?  The other argument is that without a quality start there may be no need for the bullpen because you may be losing.  Isn’t the bullpen irrelevant if the starter can’t pitch well enough to have a lead in the 5th or 6th inning? As of now the Yankees rotation looks to be very inconsistent and adding Joba too the mix would definitely make them better.  I understand a good bullpen is key to a team but how many teams have found lightening in a bottle over the past five years and lucked into a great set-up man.  Remember, Hideki Okajima was brought over more to help Dice-K’s move to America and he ended being one of the best set-up men in the game.  Also, if the bullpen isn’t working through half of the year, the Yankees have great arms in the minors that they could convert into relievers, much like they did with Joba last season.  Humberto Sanchez anyone?

Continue reading "Joba Rules"

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